Friday, January 30, 2026
More About "Road"
Wednesday, January 28, 2026
Edna Goes to Road to California!
Edna here. As you may know, I live in Northern California. I visit my quilt posse in Idaho a couple of times a year. Our friend, C, is a mad quilter. She has only attended local quilt shows and the one in Sisters, which is fairly close. She submitted an art quilt piece to 'Road to California', and it was accepted. This is a big show in Ontario, Calif. She decided to go to the show, so I met her there and we had so much fun!
We were there for a few days and took a couple classes. Following are photos we took at the show.
This is the huge corridor outside the gigantic rooms that have the vendors and the quilt show. Vendors in one big room, quilt show in the other, plus more quilts hung everywhere. Lots of local quilt groups have their own displays, which are amazing.
Examples are Santa Clara Valley Quilt Association, Inland Empire Modern Quilt Guild, So Cal/So Nev Regional SAQA group, and Glendale Quilt Guild. I have no idea whose quilts are hanging from the ceiling.
A favorite by someone in the Glendale Quilt Guild.Carlton Brown is one of my favorite abstract art quilters. I was so pleased to see one of his creations up close and personal.
I really like this quilt of protest. Things are so crazy in our country right now. Even though the quilts in this exhibit were mostly done in 2017, it speaks extremely well to what is happening right now.
Then, there was the Cherrywood Challenge: The Abyss
There are 12 quilts in this photo. There were probably over 100 on display.
Saturday, January 17, 2026
Jane's January Tutorial!
This is my annual quilting tutorial. I hope you will take a little time, out of your day, and try to make some fabric units. It is pretty simple. This year I am teaching how to use solid colors in small units, which get joined together to make bigger units, and finally an entire quilt top! It is so fun and amazing!
Someone just pointed out that this is another improvisational quilt method. True! I can't seem to get enough of that.
We start by piecing some scrap fabric pieces together:
Remember, to see the photos closer, just click on the photos and they will enlarge.These are my starting pieces. Just chain-piece some little pieces of fabric to each other. Do it until you grow each piece to a desired size. I think 5" or 6" is good. It is up to you and depends on how big your fabric scraps are (you can cut them smaller). Let them be not exactly square for now. Following is an example of how to add thin wavey/irregular strips to your creation.
And add all around to grow each "unit." You can do this until you are satisfied with the size (and how cool it looks!). Place your completed units on a design wall or arrange them on a flat surface. Move them around until you are happy with the composition. Twist them and turn them. Then decide what else you need to add. Maybe add a couple more units or grow a couple that are already on there.I thought I wanted all mine together, so I placed them with edges touching, and I decided I preferred it with white spaces in between. I spread them out again and added a couple more units and started trimming them to go with each other. It is like a mosaic!I placed my units in rows, so had to add a little to a couple to make them longer. I added a little wonky tree unit. I started sewing white fabric to my units and then sewed them together into sections, then I sewed the sections to each other.You will have to think strategically, if you have many angled pieces. Go for it.This is after all the white has been added, even on the edges. This is my quilt top. You could decide to add another border or just more white space around all those solids.Monday, January 12, 2026
What's on the Design Wall in January?
We have to get Kirsten and Jane's design wall cleared off, so Jane can complete her January tutorial. We all put some of our orphan blocks (blocks that are in the "Parts Department") up on the wall, to see what could be made of them.
It is a bit of a mess, but Astrid and Jane think they can make some sense of it and use all the pieces in a medallion quilt. They should probably take it all off of there, throw it in the air and pick it up, then take it over to Astrid's to work on.


